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Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 282: F710-F717, 2002. First published November 13, 2001; doi:10.1152/ajprenal.00303.2001
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Vol. 282, Issue 4, F710-F717, April 2002

Rottlerin inhibits tonicity-dependent expression and action of TonEBP in a PKCdelta -independent fashion

Hongyu Zhao, Wei Tian, and David M. Cohen

Division of Nephrology and Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Oregon Health and Science University and the Portland Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Portland, Oregon 97201

Novel protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms PKCdelta and PKCepsilon have recently been implicated in signaling by hypertonic stress. We investigated the role of the putative PKCdelta inhibitor rottlerin on tonicity-dependent gene regulation. In the renal medullary mIMCD3 cell line, rottlerin blocked tonicity-dependent transcription of a tonicity enhancer (TonE)-driven luciferase reporter gene, as well as tonicity-dependent transcription of the physiological tonicity effector gene aldose reductase, but not urea-dependent transcription. Consistent with these data, rottlerin inhibited tonicity-dependent expression of TonE binding protein (TonEBP) at the mRNA and protein levels. Another inhibitor of both novel and conventional PKC isoforms, GF-109203X, suppressed TonEBP-dependent transcription but failed to influence tonicity-inducible TonEBP expression. Global PKC downregulation with protracted phorbol ester treatment, however, failed to influence tonicity-dependent signaling, arguing against a PKCdelta -dependent mechanism of rottlerin action in this model. In addition, hypertonic stress failed to induce phosphorylation of PKCdelta . Furthermore, in a PC-12 cell model with a comparable degree of tonicity-dependent transcription, constitutive overexpression of dominant negative-acting PKCdelta or PKCepsilon effectively decreased tonicity signaling to extracellular signal-regulated kinase activation, as expected, but failed to influence TonE-dependent transcription. TonE-dependent transcription, however, remained rottlerin sensitive in this PC-12 cell model. In the aggregate, these data indicate that rottlerin dramatically inhibits tonicity-dependent TonEBP expression and TonE-dependent transcription but, despite its reputed mode of action, does so through a PKCdelta -independent pathway.

hypertonicity; inner medullary collecting duct; renal; kidney; signal transduction


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